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Ignacio Matte Blanco

Ignacio Matte Blanco (October 3, 1908 – January 11, 1995) was a Chilean psychiatrist and psychoanalyst who developed a logic-based explanation for the operation of the unconscious, and for the non-logical aspects of experience. In applying the complexity and paradoxes of mathematical logic to psychoanalysis, he pioneered a coherent way of understanding the clinical situation.[1] He has an international following that includes physicists, mathematicians, cyber-scientists, psychologists, mathematical philosophers, neuroscientists, theologians, linguistics and literary scholars.[2]

Ignacio Matte Blanco
Born(1908-10-03)3 October 1908
Santiago Chile
Died11 January 1995(1995-01-11) (aged 86)
Rome, Italy
NationalityChilean
CitizenshipItalian
Alma materUniversity of Chile
Known forBi-logic: application of Logic to psychoanalysis
Spouse(s)Andrea Baker
Luciana Bon de Matte
Children7
Awards
Scientific career
FieldsPsychiatry, Psychoanalysis, Symbolic Logic
InstitutionsMaudsley Hospital, British Psychoanalytical Society, Johns Hopkins University, Duke University, Chilean Society of Psychoanalysts, Istituto di Psicoanalisi di Roma, University of the Sacred Heart, Rome
InfluencesJames Strachey, Anna Freud, Melanie Klein, Wilfred Bion

Life

Matte Blanco was born in Santiago, Chile. He was educated in Chile and qualified there as a medical doctor. He entered psychoanalysis with Fernando Allende Navarro, Latin America's first qualified psychoanalyst. Having moved to London in 1933, he trained in psychiatry at South London's Maudsley Hospital and in psychoanalysis at the British Psychoanalytical Society where he was supervised by Anna Freud and James Strachey, becoming a member of the British Society in 1938.[3] He subsequently worked in the United States, from 1940. He returned to Chile in 1943 where he co-founded the Psychoanalytic Society. In 1966 he travelled to Italy, never to return to his homeland. He settled in Rome with his family. He died there at the age of 86.

The unconscious

Matte Blanco's hypothesis proposes that in the unconscious "a part can represent the whole" and that "past, present, and future are all the same"'.[4] He set out to examine the five characteristics of the unconscious that Freud had outlined: timelessness, displacement, condensation, replacement of external by internal reality, and absence of mutual contradiction.[5] Matte Blanco hypothesized the nature of unconscious logic, as opposed to conscious logic. He deduced that if the unconscious has consistent characteristics it must follow rules, or there would be chaos. However the nature of these hypothetical characteristics indicates that their rules differ from conventional logic.

In his work The Unconscious as Infinite Sets, Matte Blanco proposes that the structure of the unconscious can be summarised by the principles of Generalisation and of Symmetry: 1) The principle of Generalization: here logic does not take account of individuals as such, it deals with them only as members of classes, and of classes of classes. 2) The principle of Symmetry: here the logic treats the converse of any relation as identical to it; that is, it deals with relationships as symmetrical'.[6][7]

While the principle of Generalisation might be compatible with conventional logic, discontinuity is introduced by the principle of Symmetry under which relationships are treated as symmetrical, or reversible. Whereas asymmetrical thinking distinguishes individuals from one another by the relationship between them, reality testing, symmetrical thinking, by contrast, sees relations as holding indiscriminately across a field of individuals.[8] For example, an asymmetrical relationship, X is greater than Y, becomes reversible so that Y is simultaneously greater and smaller than X. Matte Blanco draws here on Klein's understanding that "I am angry (with a person or thing)" as very close to "Someone or something is very angry with me";[9] and indeed he suggests that Klein was the most creative and original of all those who have drawn inspiration from Freud, highlighting in particular her famous concept of projective identification.[10]

For Matte Blanco, "unconsciousness" is marked by symmetry, where there is a tendency towards 'sameness' and likewise, an implicit aversion to 'difference', while the quality of ego-functioning registers and bears difference, in a sense he called asymmetry .[11]

The symmetrical and the asymmetrical

Matte Blanco divided the unconscious into two modes of being: the symmetrical and the asymmetrical. Asymmetrical relations are relations that are non reversible. For example, “Jack reads the newspaper” cannot be reversed to the newspaper reading Jack. In this way, asymmetrical relations are logical relations and underlie everyday logic and common sense. They govern the conscious sphere of the human mind. Symmetrical relations, on the other hand, move in both directions simultaneously. For example, 'Daniel sits on a stone' can be reversed as, 'a stone sits on Daniel', without being untrue. Symmetrical relations, govern the unconscious mind. Matte Blanco states that the symmetrical, unconscious realm is the natural state of man and is a massive and infinite presence while the asymmetrical, conscious realm is a small product of it. This is why the principle of symmetry is all-encompassing and can dissolve all logic, leading to the asymmetrical relations perfectly symmetrical.[12]

To show the illogical nature of symmetry, Matte Blanco said: "In the thought system of symmetry, time does not exist. An event that occurred yesterday can also occur today or tomorrow. Traumatic events of the past are not only seen in the unconscious as ever present and permanently happening but also about to happen."[13] He said that "We are always, in a given mental product, confronted by a mixture of the logic of the unconscious with that of the preconscious and consciousness".[14] Matte Blanco gives this mixture of two logics the name bi-logic and points out that our thinking is usually bi-logical, expressing the both types of logic to differing extents.

Strata

Matte Blanco saw in-depth analysis of the mind as falling into five broad strata: in which there is a particular combination of symmetrical and asymmetrical logic' appropriate to each one.[15] In what he terms the first stratum, experience is characterized by the conscious awareness of separate objects. At this level thinking is mostly delimited and asymmetrical — closest to "normal", everyday life, to what W. R. Bion termed the mind of the "work group"...anchored to a sophisticated and rational level of behaviour.[16][17] A second stratum can be defined by the appearance of a significant amount of symmetrization within otherwise asymmetrical thinking, so that for example a man in love will attribute to the beloved young woman...all the characteristics of the class of beloved woman, but (bi-logically) he will realize that his young woman also has limitations and defects.[18]

The next deeper, third stratum is one where different classes are identified (thus containing a fair amount of asymmetrical thinking) but in which...parts of a class are always taken as the whole class — symmetrization (plus a degree of timelessness).[19] The fourth stratum is defined by the fact that there is formation of wider classes which are also symmetrized, while asymmetry becomes less and less. Thus because "being a man" is a wider class than ones men, women and children, being a man is also equivalent to being a woman and a child. In this fourth and rather deep stratum, a number of the features of the Freudian unconscious are also characteristic. There is an absence of contradiction, also an identity of psychical and external reality.[20] Finally, the deepest, fifth stratum is that in which processes of symmetrization tend towards the mathematical limit of indivisibility thinking, which requires asymmetrical relations, is greatly impaired and becomes the realm of psychotic functioning: without asymmetrical logic, play breaks down into delusion.[21][22]

Normal human development for Matte Blanco, involved gradual familiarity with all five strata, including the capacity both to differentiate and to move between them all; in abnormal states, this continuity of differentiation between the strata becomes fractured or confused.[23]

Thus, asymmetrical thoughts are said to be at the surface, while the symmetrical relations make up multiple lower strata that go deeper until an “invisible mode” or total symmetry is reached. In the deeper, completely unconscious levels, a statement such as “Jane is the mother of Jasmine” is equally valid as “Jasmine is the mother of Jane”. This statement reversal sounds preposterous to logical, asymmetrical, conscious thought, but the depth of the unconscious has its own rules. There, such a statement is true and incontestable. In this way, the principle of symmetry changes the asymmetrical to symmetrical or, put another way, the logical into the illogical.[24]

Influence

Matte Blanco hoped that his logical underpinning of the unconscious would contribute to development in other areas of knowledge, apart from psychoanalysis.[25] There are applications in theology.[26] Other applications can be found in art and literature. A number of writers have explored parallels between the work of Matte Blanco and of Gregory Bateson including Margaret Arden, Horacio Etchegoyen and Jorge L. Ahumada.[27][28] Papers by Arden, Etchegoyen and Ahumada are summarized in Rayner.[29] More contemporary applications may be found in the area of Cognitive informatics.[30]

An International Bi-logic Conference was held every other year: in August 2016 it was held in London.

See also

References

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-09-27. Retrieved 2011-08-08.
  2. ^ Iurato, Giuseppe. (2014) At the grounding of computational psychoanalysis: on the work of Ignacio Matte Blanco A general history of culture overview of Matte Blanco bilogic in comparison, https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01023409
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-09-27. Retrieved 2011-08-07.
  4. ^ Patrick Casement, Further Learning from the Patient (London 1996), p. 76
  5. ^ West, Marcus. Feeling, Being and the Sense of Self (London 2007) p. 103
  6. ^ Matte Blanco, I. (1975) The Unconscious as Infinite Sets. London: Karmac
  7. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-09-27. Retrieved 2011-08-07.
  8. ^ Michael Parsons, The Dove that Returns, the Dove that Vanishes (London 2000) p. 49
  9. ^ Josephine Klein, Our Need for Others (London, 1994) p. 141
  10. ^ Eric Rayner/David Tuckett, "An Introduction", Igancio Matte Blanco, Thinking, Feeling and Being (1988) p. 5
  11. ^ West, p. 103
  12. ^ Cooper, Paul. “Unconscious Process: Zen and Psychoanalytic Versions.” Journal of Religion and Health 39.1 (2000): 57-69.
  13. ^ Klaus Fink, in Casement, p. 180
  14. ^ Matte Blanco, I. (1988) Thinking, Feeling and Being London and New York: Routledge
  15. ^ Rayner/Tuckett, p. 23
  16. ^ Rayer/Tuckett, p. 23
  17. ^ W. R. Bion, Experiences in Groups (London 1980) p. 98 and p. 66
  18. ^ Rayner/Tuckett, p. 23-4
  19. ^ Rayner/Tuckett, p. 24
  20. ^ Rayner/Tuckett, p. 25
  21. ^ Rayner/Tuckett, p. 25
  22. ^ Rayner, in Parsons, p. 49
  23. ^ N. G. Rucker/K. L. Lombardi, Subject Relations (1998) p. 17
  24. ^ Cooper, Paul. “Unconscious Process: Zen and Psychoanalytic Versions.” Journal of Religion and Health 39.1 (2000): 60-61.
  25. ^ Rayner, E. (1995) Unconscious Logic: An Introduction to Matte Blanco's Bi-logic and Its Uses. London and New York: Routledge.
  26. ^ Bomford, R. (1999) The Symmetry of God. London: Free Association Books
  27. ^ Arden, Margaret (1984). "Infinite sets and double-binds". International Journal of Psychoanalysis. 65: 443–52. PMID 6544755.
  28. ^ Etchegoyen, Horacio; Ahumada, Jorge L. (1990). "Bateson and Matte-Blanco: Bio-Logic and Bi-Logic". International Journal of Psychoanalysis. 17: 493–502.
  29. ^ Rayner, E. (1995), Unconscious Logic, p. 144
  30. ^ Murtagh, Fionn (2014). "Mathematical Representations of Matte Blanco's Bi-Logic based on Metric Space and Ultrametric or Hierarchical Topology: Towards Practical Application". Language and Psychoanalysis. 3 (2): 40–63. doi:10.7565/landp.2014.008. http://www.language-and-psychoanalysis.com/article/viewFile/1581/2036

Further reading

  • Battilotti, G. (2014), "Symmetry vs. Duality in Logic: An Interpretation of Bi-Logic to Model Cognitive Processes Beyond Inference", International Journal of Cognitive Informatics and Natural Intelligence, 8 (4): 83-97.
  • Britton, R. (1994), "The blindness of the seeing eye: Inverse symmetry as a defense against reality", Psychoanalytic Inquiry, 14: 365-378.
  • Fellenor, J. (2011), "The unpredictability of metaphor: Ignacio Matte-Blanco's bi-logic and the nature of metaphoric processes", International Forum of Psychoanalysis, 20 (3): 138-147.
  • Fink, K. (1989), "From Symmetry to Asymmetry", International Journal of Psycho-Analysis, 70: 481–489.
  • Iurato, G. (2014), "The Dawning of Computational Psychoanalysis: A Proposal for Some First Elementary Formalization Attempts", International Journal of Cognitive Informatics and Natural Intelligence, 8 (4): 50-82.
  • Khrennikov, A., Kotovich, N. (2014), "Towards Ultrametric Modeling of Unconscious Creativity", International Journal of Cognitive Informatics and Natural Intelligence, 8 (4) (2014): 98-109.
  • Lauro Grotto, R. (2007), "The unconscious as an ultrametric set", American Imago, 64 (4): 52-62.
  • Lauro Grotto, R. (2014), "Formal Approaches in Computational Psychoanalysis and the Embodiment Issue", International Journal of Cognitive Informatics and Natural Intelligence, 8 (4): 35-49.
  • Lombardi, R. (2015), Formless Infinity. Clinical Explorations of Matte Blanco and Bion, London: Routledge.
  • Mancia, M. (2008), "The early unrepressed unconscious in relation to Matte Blanco's thought", International Forum of Psychoanalysis, 17 (4): 201-212.
  • Murtagh, F. (2012), "Ultrametric Model of Mind, I: Review", P-Adic Numbers, Ultrametric Analysis, and Applications, 4 (3): 193-206.
  • Murtagh, F. (2012), "Ultrametric Model of Mind, II: Applications to Text Content Analysis", P-Adic Numbers, Ultrametric Analysis, and Applications, 4 (3): 207-221.
  • Murtagh, F. (2014), "Mathematical representations of Matte Blanco's bi-logic, based on metric space and ultrametric or hierarchical topology: towards practical application", Language and Psychoanalysis, 3 (2): 40-63.
  • Murtagh, F. (2014), "Pattern Recognition of Subconscious Underpinnings of Cognition using Ultrametric Topological Mapping of Thinking and Memory", International Journal of Cognitive Informatics and Natural Intelligence, 8 (4): 1-16.
  • Tonti, M. (2014), "The Operationalization of the Unconscious: Models of Subcognitive Informatics", International Journal of Cognitive Informatics and Natural Intelligence, 8 (4): 17-34.

ignacio, matte, blanco, october, 1908, january, 1995, chilean, psychiatrist, psychoanalyst, developed, logic, based, explanation, operation, unconscious, logical, aspects, experience, applying, complexity, paradoxes, mathematical, logic, psychoanalysis, pionee. Ignacio Matte Blanco October 3 1908 January 11 1995 was a Chilean psychiatrist and psychoanalyst who developed a logic based explanation for the operation of the unconscious and for the non logical aspects of experience In applying the complexity and paradoxes of mathematical logic to psychoanalysis he pioneered a coherent way of understanding the clinical situation 1 He has an international following that includes physicists mathematicians cyber scientists psychologists mathematical philosophers neuroscientists theologians linguistics and literary scholars 2 Ignacio Matte BlancoBorn 1908 10 03 3 October 1908Santiago ChileDied11 January 1995 1995 01 11 aged 86 Rome ItalyNationalityChileanCitizenshipItalianAlma materUniversity of ChileKnown forBi logic application of Logic to psychoanalysisSpouse s Andrea Baker Luciana Bon de MatteChildren7AwardsScientific careerFieldsPsychiatry Psychoanalysis Symbolic LogicInstitutionsMaudsley Hospital British Psychoanalytical Society Johns Hopkins University Duke University Chilean Society of Psychoanalysts Istituto di Psicoanalisi di Roma University of the Sacred Heart RomeInfluencesJames Strachey Anna Freud Melanie Klein Wilfred Bion Contents 1 Life 2 The unconscious 3 The symmetrical and the asymmetrical 4 Strata 5 Influence 6 See also 7 References 8 Further readingLife EditMatte Blanco was born in Santiago Chile He was educated in Chile and qualified there as a medical doctor He entered psychoanalysis with Fernando Allende Navarro Latin America s first qualified psychoanalyst Having moved to London in 1933 he trained in psychiatry at South London s Maudsley Hospital and in psychoanalysis at the British Psychoanalytical Society where he was supervised by Anna Freud and James Strachey becoming a member of the British Society in 1938 3 He subsequently worked in the United States from 1940 He returned to Chile in 1943 where he co founded the Psychoanalytic Society In 1966 he travelled to Italy never to return to his homeland He settled in Rome with his family He died there at the age of 86 The unconscious EditMatte Blanco s hypothesis proposes that in the unconscious a part can represent the whole and that past present and future are all the same 4 He set out to examine the five characteristics of the unconscious that Freud had outlined timelessness displacement condensation replacement of external by internal reality and absence of mutual contradiction 5 Matte Blanco hypothesized the nature of unconscious logic as opposed to conscious logic He deduced that if the unconscious has consistent characteristics it must follow rules or there would be chaos However the nature of these hypothetical characteristics indicates that their rules differ from conventional logic In his work The Unconscious as Infinite Sets Matte Blanco proposes that the structure of the unconscious can be summarised by the principles of Generalisation and of Symmetry 1 The principle of Generalization here logic does not take account of individuals as such it deals with them only as members of classes and of classes of classes 2 The principle of Symmetry here the logic treats the converse of any relation as identical to it that is it deals with relationships as symmetrical 6 7 While the principle of Generalisation might be compatible with conventional logic discontinuity is introduced by the principle of Symmetry under which relationships are treated as symmetrical or reversible Whereas asymmetrical thinking distinguishes individuals from one another by the relationship between them reality testing symmetrical thinking by contrast sees relations as holding indiscriminately across a field of individuals 8 For example an asymmetrical relationship X is greater than Y becomes reversible so that Y is simultaneously greater and smaller than X Matte Blanco draws here on Klein s understanding that I am angry with a person or thing as very close to Someone or something is very angry with me 9 and indeed he suggests that Klein was the most creative and original of all those who have drawn inspiration from Freud highlighting in particular her famous concept of projective identification 10 For Matte Blanco unconsciousness is marked by symmetry where there is a tendency towards sameness and likewise an implicit aversion to difference while the quality of ego functioning registers and bears difference in a sense he called asymmetry 11 The symmetrical and the asymmetrical EditMatte Blanco divided the unconscious into two modes of being the symmetrical and the asymmetrical Asymmetrical relations are relations that are non reversible For example Jack reads the newspaper cannot be reversed to the newspaper reading Jack In this way asymmetrical relations are logical relations and underlie everyday logic and common sense They govern the conscious sphere of the human mind Symmetrical relations on the other hand move in both directions simultaneously For example Daniel sits on a stone can be reversed as a stone sits on Daniel without being untrue Symmetrical relations govern the unconscious mind Matte Blanco states that the symmetrical unconscious realm is the natural state of man and is a massive and infinite presence while the asymmetrical conscious realm is a small product of it This is why the principle of symmetry is all encompassing and can dissolve all logic leading to the asymmetrical relations perfectly symmetrical 12 To show the illogical nature of symmetry Matte Blanco said In the thought system of symmetry time does not exist An event that occurred yesterday can also occur today or tomorrow Traumatic events of the past are not only seen in the unconscious as ever present and permanently happening but also about to happen 13 He said that We are always in a given mental product confronted by a mixture of the logic of the unconscious with that of the preconscious and consciousness 14 Matte Blanco gives this mixture of two logics the name bi logic and points out that our thinking is usually bi logical expressing the both types of logic to differing extents Strata EditMatte Blanco saw in depth analysis of the mind as falling into five broad strata in which there is a particular combination of symmetrical and asymmetrical logic appropriate to each one 15 In what he terms the first stratum experience is characterized by the conscious awareness of separate objects At this level thinking is mostly delimited and asymmetrical closest to normal everyday life to what W R Bion termed the mind of the work group anchored to a sophisticated and rational level of behaviour 16 17 A second stratum can be defined by the appearance of a significant amount of symmetrization within otherwise asymmetrical thinking so that for example a man in love will attribute to the beloved young woman all the characteristics of the class of beloved woman but bi logically he will realize that his young woman also has limitations and defects 18 The next deeper third stratum is one where different classes are identified thus containing a fair amount of asymmetrical thinking but in which parts of a class are always taken as the whole class symmetrization plus a degree of timelessness 19 The fourth stratum is defined by the fact that there is formation of wider classes which are also symmetrized while asymmetry becomes less and less Thus because being a man is a wider class than ones men women and children being a man is also equivalent to being a woman and a child In this fourth and rather deep stratum a number of the features of the Freudian unconscious are also characteristic There is an absence of contradiction also an identity of psychical and external reality 20 Finally the deepest fifth stratum is that in which processes of symmetrization tend towards the mathematical limit of indivisibility thinking which requires asymmetrical relations is greatly impaired and becomes the realm of psychotic functioning without asymmetrical logic play breaks down into delusion 21 22 Normal human development for Matte Blanco involved gradual familiarity with all five strata including the capacity both to differentiate and to move between them all in abnormal states this continuity of differentiation between the strata becomes fractured or confused 23 Thus asymmetrical thoughts are said to be at the surface while the symmetrical relations make up multiple lower strata that go deeper until an invisible mode or total symmetry is reached In the deeper completely unconscious levels a statement such as Jane is the mother of Jasmine is equally valid as Jasmine is the mother of Jane This statement reversal sounds preposterous to logical asymmetrical conscious thought but the depth of the unconscious has its own rules There such a statement is true and incontestable In this way the principle of symmetry changes the asymmetrical to symmetrical or put another way the logical into the illogical 24 Influence EditMatte Blanco hoped that his logical underpinning of the unconscious would contribute to development in other areas of knowledge apart from psychoanalysis 25 There are applications in theology 26 Other applications can be found in art and literature A number of writers have explored parallels between the work of Matte Blanco and of Gregory Bateson including Margaret Arden Horacio Etchegoyen and Jorge L Ahumada 27 28 Papers by Arden Etchegoyen and Ahumada are summarized in Rayner 29 More contemporary applications may be found in the area of Cognitive informatics 30 An International Bi logic Conference was held every other year in August 2016 it was held in London See also EditClaudio Naranjo Infinite setReferences Edit James S Grotstein Archived from the original on 2011 09 27 Retrieved 2011 08 08 Iurato Giuseppe 2014 At the grounding of computational psychoanalysis on the work of Ignacio Matte Blanco A general history of culture overview of Matte Blanco bilogic in comparison https hal archives ouvertes fr hal 01023409 Matte Blanco Ignacio Archived from the original on 2011 09 27 Retrieved 2011 08 07 Patrick Casement Further Learning from the Patient London 1996 p 76 West Marcus Feeling Being and the Sense of Self London 2007 p 103 Matte Blanco I 1975 The Unconscious as Infinite Sets London Karmac Matte Blanco Ignacio Archived from the original on 2011 09 27 Retrieved 2011 08 07 Michael Parsons The Dove that Returns the Dove that Vanishes London 2000 p 49 Josephine Klein Our Need for Others London 1994 p 141 Eric Rayner David Tuckett An Introduction Igancio Matte Blanco Thinking Feeling and Being 1988 p 5 West p 103 Cooper Paul Unconscious Process Zen and Psychoanalytic Versions Journal of Religion and Health 39 1 2000 57 69 Klaus Fink in Casement p 180 Matte Blanco I 1988 Thinking Feeling and Being London and New York Routledge Rayner Tuckett p 23 Rayer Tuckett p 23 W R Bion Experiences in Groups London 1980 p 98 and p 66 Rayner Tuckett p 23 4 Rayner Tuckett p 24 Rayner Tuckett p 25 Rayner Tuckett p 25 Rayner in Parsons p 49 N G Rucker K L Lombardi Subject Relations 1998 p 17 Cooper Paul Unconscious Process Zen and Psychoanalytic Versions Journal of Religion and Health 39 1 2000 60 61 Rayner E 1995 Unconscious Logic An Introduction to Matte Blanco s Bi logic and Its Uses London and New York Routledge Bomford R 1999 The Symmetry of God London Free Association Books Arden Margaret 1984 Infinite sets and double binds International Journal of Psychoanalysis 65 443 52 PMID 6544755 Etchegoyen Horacio Ahumada Jorge L 1990 Bateson and Matte Blanco Bio Logic and Bi Logic International Journal of Psychoanalysis 17 493 502 Rayner E 1995 Unconscious Logic p 144 Murtagh Fionn 2014 Mathematical Representations of Matte Blanco s Bi Logic based on Metric Space and Ultrametric or Hierarchical Topology Towards Practical Application Language and Psychoanalysis 3 2 40 63 doi 10 7565 landp 2014 008 http www language and psychoanalysis com article viewFile 1581 2036Further reading EditBattilotti G 2014 Symmetry vs Duality in Logic An Interpretation of Bi Logic to Model Cognitive Processes Beyond Inference International Journal of Cognitive Informatics and Natural Intelligence 8 4 83 97 Britton R 1994 The blindness of the seeing eye Inverse symmetry as a defense against reality Psychoanalytic Inquiry 14 365 378 Fellenor J 2011 The unpredictability of metaphor Ignacio Matte Blanco s bi logic and the nature of metaphoric processes International Forum of Psychoanalysis 20 3 138 147 Fink K 1989 From Symmetry to Asymmetry International Journal of Psycho Analysis 70 481 489 Iurato G 2014 The Dawning of Computational Psychoanalysis A Proposal for Some First Elementary Formalization Attempts International Journal of Cognitive Informatics and Natural Intelligence 8 4 50 82 Khrennikov A Kotovich N 2014 Towards Ultrametric Modeling of Unconscious Creativity International Journal of Cognitive Informatics and Natural Intelligence 8 4 2014 98 109 Lauro Grotto R 2007 The unconscious as an ultrametric set American Imago 64 4 52 62 Lauro Grotto R 2014 Formal Approaches in Computational Psychoanalysis and the Embodiment Issue International Journal of Cognitive Informatics and Natural Intelligence 8 4 35 49 Lombardi R 2015 Formless Infinity Clinical Explorations of Matte Blanco and Bion London Routledge Mancia M 2008 The early unrepressed unconscious in relation to Matte Blanco s thought International Forum of Psychoanalysis 17 4 201 212 Murtagh F 2012 Ultrametric Model of Mind I Review P Adic Numbers Ultrametric Analysis and Applications 4 3 193 206 Murtagh F 2012 Ultrametric Model of Mind II Applications to Text Content Analysis P Adic Numbers Ultrametric Analysis and Applications 4 3 207 221 Murtagh F 2014 Mathematical representations of Matte Blanco s bi logic based on metric space and ultrametric or hierarchical topology towards practical application Language and Psychoanalysis 3 2 40 63 Murtagh F 2014 Pattern Recognition of Subconscious Underpinnings of Cognition using Ultrametric Topological Mapping of Thinking and Memory International Journal of Cognitive Informatics and Natural Intelligence 8 4 1 16 Tonti M 2014 The Operationalization of the Unconscious Models of Subcognitive Informatics International Journal of Cognitive Informatics and Natural Intelligence 8 4 17 34 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ignacio Matte Blanco amp oldid 1114080046, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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